Luke Bell Pottery

Luke Bell Pottery From firewood to firebrick. Pottery rooted in faith, forged through struggle. Kiln dream in progress - follow the journey.

When Inspiration Interrupts the WorkTrimming a whole mess of cone 10 bowls today — just locked in, moving from one form ...
03/23/2026

When Inspiration Interrupts the Work

Trimming a whole mess of cone 10 bowls today — just locked in, moving from one form to the next, finding that rhythm where the wheel, the clay, and the hands all sync up. And then this little piece came off the wheel.

Normally that’s the kind of thing that slows you down… but this time it did the opposite. I was so deep into the work that the moment it popped loose, something clicked. A new idea. A new direction. A reminder that the clay is always talking back if you’re paying attention.

Sometimes inspiration doesn’t show up when you’re sketching or planning. Sometimes it hits in the middle of the mess — trimming shavings everywhere, hands covered in slip, and a bowl spinning in front of you.

That’s the part of the craft I love. The unexpected moments that push the work forward.

The path to mastery isn’t glamorous. It’s repetition, refinement, and the discipline to throw a hundred forms just to ke...
03/22/2026

The path to mastery isn’t glamorous. It’s repetition, refinement, and the discipline to throw a hundred forms just to keep a handful — or none at all.

I’ve got 200 pounds of cone 10 clay set aside for one purpose: skill building.
Not production.
Not inventory.
Not sales.

Just intentional practice.

Before my kiln is built, before my blended claybody is wheel‑ready, and before my shop opens, I’m using this clay to run full cycles of forms — starting with bowls and mugs. The goal is simple: make each form as similar as possible while sharpening proportion, silhouette, and consistency.

Some pieces will survive. Most won’t.
That’s the point.

This is where the real work happens.
This is where form language is forged.
This is where discipline becomes muscle memory.

When the kiln is finally hot, I won’t be “starting.”
I’ll be arriving — with a trained eye, a refined hand, and a clear direction for the work ahead.

Mastery is built long before the first firing. I’m in that season now.

Today’s small throwing session wasn’t about production—it was about calibration.Click here to watch how I threw these. h...
03/22/2026

Today’s small throwing session wasn’t about production—it was about calibration.

Click here to watch how I threw these.
https://youtu.be/npSVuhq6qdM?si=aysu-YkjnPGVY7Gv

I’m shifting my studio from a blended cone 6 claybody to a true cone 10 workflow, and while my reclaimed cone 6 clay is resting and rehydrating, I’m using this new cone 10 body to dial in my form and technique.

Cone 10 clay moves differently. It stretches slower, it rewards compression, and it asks for a little more intention in the lift. So I threw a few 2‑lb bowls today just to feel out the material—how it centers, how it pulls, how the walls want to rise.

These bowls aren’t “test pieces.” They’re data.

Every pull tells me something about this clay.
Every curve helps me refine my Quiet Curve form language.
Every spiral in the base is another step toward consistency.

While my reclaimed cone 6 clay gets ready for the wheel, this cone 10 cycle is helping me sharpen my technique, tighten my proportions, and build the muscle memory I’ll need for the next chapter of my work.

Small session. Big progress.

03/22/2026

Today’s small throwing session wasn’t about production—it was about calibration.

I’m shifting my studio from a blended cone 6 claybody to a true cone 10 workflow, and while my reclaimed cone 6 clay is resting and rehydrating, I’m using this new cone 10 body to dial in my form and technique.

Cone 10 clay moves differently. It stretches slower, it rewards compression, and it asks for a little more intention in the lift. So I threw a few 2‑lb bowls today just to feel out the material—how it centers, how it pulls, how the walls want to rise.

These bowls aren’t “test pieces.” They’re data.

Every pull tells me something about this clay.
Every curve helps me refine my Quiet Curve form language.
Every spiral in the base is another step toward consistency.

While my reclaimed cone 6 clay gets ready for the wheel, this cone 10 cycle is helping me sharpen my technique, tighten my proportions, and build the muscle memory I’ll need for the next chapter of my work.

Small session. Big progress.

03/19/2026

My first bag of cone 6 reclaim.

03/19/2026

My first bag of blended cone 6 reclaim.

I picked up the clay that will eventually become the foundation of my cone 10 reduction work. This week I’ll be making t...
03/17/2026

I picked up the clay that will eventually become the foundation of my cone 10 reduction work. This week I’ll be making test tiles and throwing a few forms to learn how it moves and what I can expect from it long-term.

For everyone following along: when my Etsy shop opens, it will feature cone 6 pieces made from my blended claybody — the material that’s been with me through hundreds of mugs, bowls, and vases. It’s the clay that shaped my early studio years, and I’m excited to share the last of that work.
But the future of my studio is cone 10. This new clay is the first step toward that transition, and I’ll be documenting the process as I get to know it. One test tile, one form, one firing at a time.

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